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Aragats

Stratovulcano · Armenia · 4095 m

The two northern summits of Aragats volcano in NW Armenia seen from a ridge to the south. Extensive hydrothermal alteration has modified rocks in the summit region of this large andesitic-to-dacitic stratovolcano. The main edifice of Aragats is dissected by glaciers and is of Pliocene to late-Pleistocene age. Satellite cones and fissures have produced lava flows of late-Pleistocene to possible Holocene age.
The two northern summits of Aragats volcano in NW Armenia seen from a ridge to the south. Extensive hydrothermal alteration has modified rocks in the summit region of this large andesitic-to-dacitic stratovolcano. The main edifice of Aragats is dissected by glaciers and is of Pliocene to late-Pleistocene age. Satellite cones and fissures have produced lava flows of late-Pleistocene to possible Holocene age. · Foto: Photo by Alexander Margarian. · Wikimedia Commons
Tipo
Stratovulcano
Paese
Armenia
Regione
Arabia-Central Asia Volcanic Regions / Caucasus Volcanic Province
Altitudine
4095 m
Coordinate
40.530, 44.200
Ultima eruzione
Sconosciuto
Contesto tettonico
Intraplate / Continental crust (> 25 km)
Forma vulcanica
Composite
Roccia principale
Andesite / Basaltic Andesite
Sintesi geologica

Aragats is a large andesitic-to-dacitic stratovolcano in NW Armenia about 40 km NW of the capital city of Yerevan. The main edifice is dissected by glaciers and is of Pliocene-to-Pleistocene age. Satellitic cones and fissures are located on all sides of the volcano and were the source of large lava flows that descended its lower flanks. Several of these were considered to be of Holocene age, but later Potassium-Argon dating indicated mid- to late-Pleistocene ages. The youngest lower-flank flows have not been precisely dated, but are constrained as occurring between the end of the late-Pleistocene and 3000 BCE (Kharakanian et al., 2003). A 13-km-long, WSW-ENE-trending line of craters and pyroclastic cones cuts across the northern crater rim and is the source of young lava flows and lahars; the latter were considered to be characteristic of Holocene summit eruptions.

Sintesi da Wikipedia

Il monte Aragats è la montagna più alta dell'Armenia moderna, dopo che il monte Ararat è rimasto alla Turchia. Si trova nella provincia di Aragatsotn, che in armeno vuol dire "il piede dell'Aragats", ed è uno stratovulcano spento. L'orlo del cratere è costituito da quattro vette: la più alta a nord di 4.095 m, la ovest di 4.080 m, la sud di 3.879 m e la est di 3.916 m. Lungo le sue pendici si trovano la fortezza medioevale di Amberd e l'osservatorio di Byurakan.

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